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Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities [email protected] www.aacu.org Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature Assignments Now Indiana Signature Assignments Workshop March 2014
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Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities [email protected] Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

Dec 16, 2015

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Page 1: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

Debra HumphreysAssociation of American Colleges & Universities

[email protected]

Liberal Education and America’s Promise:Why Focus on Signature Assignments Now

Indiana Signature Assignments WorkshopMarch 2014

Page 2: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

The Big Picture“The world in which today’s students will make choices and compose lives is one of disruption rather than certainty, and of interdependence

rather than insularity.”

College Learning for the New Global Century(AAC&U 2007)

Page 3: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

“A COLLABORATION BETWEEN EDUCATORS, STUDENTS, POLICYMAKERS, AND BUSINESS AND COMMUNITY

LEADERS”

Page 4: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

LEAP in 2014Bringing Democracy and Economic Opportunity Together – Through the Power and

Value of A Horizon-Expanding, Innovative, and Transformative Liberal Education

Page 5: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

To Ensure Our Democratic and Economic Future, Students Need

• The Capacity to Envision• Analytical Skills to Test Alternatives• The Desire and Ability to Solve Problems Across

Difference• Wisdom to Consider Larger Contexts and

Consequences• Commitment to Devote Time and Talent to the

Making of a Better World

Page 6: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

Narrow Learning is Not EnoughThe LEAP Essential Learning Outcomes

Knowledge of Human Cultures and the Physical and Natural WorldFocused on engagement with big questions, enduring and contemporary

Intellectual and Practical SkillsPracticed extensively across the curriculum, in the context of progressively more challenging problems, projects, and standards for performance

Personal and Social ResponsibilityAnchored through active involvement with diverse communities and real-world challenges

Integrative and Applied Learning

Demonstrated through the application of knowledge, skills, and responsibilities to new settings and complex problems

Page 7: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

Reason #1Our curricula—including the work we assign students to do across the curricula—must build their capacity to succeed and flourish in a world of complexity, change, and interdependence. We need to

work together on new designs for assignments that accomplish this goal.

Page 8: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

How Are Workplace Demands Changing?“Human work will increasingly shift toward two kinds of tasks: solving problems for which standard operating procedures do not currently exist, and working with new

information—acquiring it, making sense of it, communicating it to others….today, work that consists of following clearly specified directions is increasingly being carried out by computers and workers in lower-wage countries. The remaining jobs that pay enough to support families require a deeper level of knowledge and the skills to apply it.”

“Frank Levy and Richard Murnane, “Dancing with Robots” (2013)

Page 9: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

The Changing Workplace

Source: Dancing with Robots: Human Skills for Computerized Work, by Frank Levy and Richard J. Murnane. Third Way, 2013.

Page 10: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

Employers Focus on Capacity for Learning/Problem-Solving

“The premium on lifelong learning just keeps going up…the world is changing even faster. Learning how to love learning is becoming more important – and the importance of static knowledge is going down….Students have to have knowledge and know how to use it—know AND do. All learning should revolve around projects.”

 David Rattray, Senior Director, Education & Workforce Development,

LA Chamber of Commerce

Page 11: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

National Surveys of Employers on College Learning and Graduates’ Work Readiness

AAC&U commissioned Hart Research Associates (in 2006, 2007, 2009, and 2013) to interview employers (C-level suite executives and, in 2009 additional human resource professionals) whose companies report that hiring relatively large numbers of college graduates

How Should Colleges Prepare Students to Succeed in Today’s Global Economy? (AAC&U, 2007)

How Should Colleges Assess and Improve Student Learning? Employers’ Views on the Accountability Challenge (AAC&U, 2008)

Raising the Bar: Employers’ Views on College Learning in the Wake of the Economic Downturn (AAC&U, 2010)

It Takes More Than a Major: Employer Priorities for College Learning and Student Success (AAC&U, 2013)

See: www.aacu.org/leap/public_opinion_research

Page 12: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

HARTRESEARCHA S S O T E SC I A

It Takes More Than A Major:Employer Priorities for College Learning

and Student Success

Key findings from survey among 318 employersConducted January 9 – 13, 2013

for

Page 13: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

It Takes More Than A Major – January 2013 – Hart Research for13

Our company puts a priority on hiring people with the intellectual and inter-personal skills that will help them contribute to innovation in the workplace

Candidates’ demonstrated capacity to think critically, communicate clearly, & solve complex problems is more important than their undergraduate major

Our company is asking employees to take on more responsibilities and to use a broader set of skills than in the past

Innovation is essential to our company/organization’s continued success

The challenges employees face within our company are more complex today than they were in the past

Employers Prioritize Innovation and Transferable Skills

50%

51%

52%

59%

57%

Strongly agree with this statement about employees/future hires Somewhat agree

95%

93%

93%

92%

91%

Page 14: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

It Takes More Than A Major – January 2013 – Hart Research for14

Ethical judgment and integrity

Comfortable working with colleagues, customers, and/or clients from diverse cultural backgrounds

Demonstrated capacity for professional development and continued new learning

Interest in giving back to the communities in which our company is located or those that it serves

Knowledge of global cultures, histories, values, religions, and social systems

16%

26%

61%

63%

76%

Very important that our employees have this quality/skill Fairly important

96%

94%

96%

71%

55%

Employers value cross-cutting skills and support liberal arts, diversity, and civic learning

Page 15: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

Key Capabilities Open the Door for Career Success and Earnings

“Irrespective of college major or institutional selectivity, what matters to career success is students’ development of a broad set of cross-cutting capacities…”

Anthony Carnevale, Georgetown UniversityCenter on Education and the Workforce

Page 16: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

Reason #2To ensure that we are setting up students for long-term professional success, all students need direct experience—across the curriculum—probing and tackling unscripted problems. If they are invested

in the problems, they are more likely to develop the problem-solving capacities they need.

Page 17: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

17

Research and Evidence-Based Analysis 83%

Expecting students to develop the skills to research questions in their field and develop evidence-based analyses

Senior Projects 79%

Students complete significant project before graduation, demonstrating knowledge in major & analytical, problem-solving, communication skills

Internships and Community-Based Work 78%

Students complete internship or community-based field project to connect classroom learning with real-world experiences

Collaborative Research 74%

Expecting students to develop the skills to conduct research collaboratively with their peers

Employers endorse research, applied learning, and project-based curricula

Percentage of Employers Who Say Practice Will Help Students A Lot or A Fair Amount to Succeed in the Workplace

Page 18: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

It Takes More Than a Major and More Than a Random Collection of Courses

“Beware. Your degree is not a proxy for your ability to do any job. The world only cares about — and pays off on — what you can do with what you know (and it doesn’t care how you learned it). And in an age when innovation is increasingly a group endeavor, it also cares about a lot of soft skills — leadership, humility, collaboration, adaptability and loving to learn and re-learn. This will be true no matter where you go to work.”Lazslo Bock, senior VP of people operations, Google (quoted in NY Times 2/23, 2004)

Page 19: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

How Do We Get There? And How Will We Know If We’ve Succeeded?

• Re-map the curriculum—more intentional designs; more cross-disciplinary work

• Connect general education requirements/skill-building with upper-division project-based curricula in majors

• Require every student to do problem-based work and evidence-based research

• Embed real-world application at multiple levels

Page 20: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

Implications for Disciplines, Assignments, and Assessments,

• Entire educational experience—through scaffolded curricula, assignments, and assessments—should build capacity to grapple with big questions and unscripted problems

• Disciplinary inquiry still foundational, but students need to connect disciplines to other perspectives and understand limitations of disciplines

• Students’ portfolios can organize their own documentation and development of key capacities

Page 21: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

How Might This Work in the Real World?• Kentucky Quality Collaboratives Project (connected to new General Education outcomes-based transfer policy)

• Gen Ed Transfer organized around broad SLOs

• Professional Learning Communities

• Eg. Math, Developmental Math, and Statistics faculty worked together across system to design and scaffold assignments—and coordinate assessments

Page 22: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

KY Example: Quantitative Reasoning1. Interpret information in mathematical or statistical forms. (LEAP B)*2. Illustrate and communicate mathematical and/or statistical information symbolically, visually, and/or numerically. (LEAP A, B and C)*3. Determine when computations are needed and to execute the appropriate computations. (LEAP B)*4. Apply an appropriate model to the problem to be solved (LEAP A, C and D)*5. Make inferences, evaluate assumptions, and assess limitations in estimation modeling and/or statistical analysis. (LEAP B, C and D)*

*QR courses should meet all five SLOs.

Page 23: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

Assignment Assignment ScaffoldScaffold

Interpretation Representation &

Communication

Calculation Application/Analysis

Assumptions

Interpret mathematical

and/or statistical

information.

Illustrate and communicate

math/stat information

symbolically, visually, and/or numerically.

Determine and execute

necessary computations.

Apply appropriate

models to solve problems.

Make inferences,

evaluate assumptions, &

assess limitations in

modeling and/or statistical analysis.

EmergingEmerging

DevelopingDeveloping

AdvancingAdvancing

Quantitative Quantitative Value RubricValue Rubric

Kentucky Kentucky Essential Essential Learning Learning

Outcomes or Outcomes or DQPDQP

Service LearningService Learning

Service LearningService LearningMath Math AccelerationAcceleration

Inquiry ProjectsInquiry Projects

Inquiry ProjectsInquiry Projects

Page 24: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

Reason #3• Declining public confidence in the quality/value of college degrees

• Policymakers respond with increased demands for accountability—need assessment results that are easily communicated but also calibrated to these 21st-century learning outcomes

• Why we must coordinate signature assignments; scaffold them; and use them for common assessment purposes

Page 25: Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities humphreys@aacu.org  Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Why Focus on Signature.

Signature Assignments—Scaffolded Across the Curriculum Can Help Students Understand the

True Power of Education

“In a world of relentless change, all students need the kind of education that leads them to ask not just ‘how do we get this done?’ but also ‘what is

most worth doing?’”

College Learning for the New Global Century, 2007